Rugby on TV : Aug 25-31

FULL LIST

FRIDAY AUGUST 27

8:35 AM – WAIKATO V COUTNIES MANUKAU – NPC – SKY SPORTS ARENA

7:30PM – MUNSTER V GLOUCESTER – FRIENDLY – IRISH EXAMINER LIVESTREAM

7:45PM – AYRSHIRE BULLS V WATSONIANS – SUPER 6 – FREESPORTS

SATURDAY AUGUST 28

3:45AM – AUSTRALIA V NEW ZEALAND – WOMEN’S TEST – SKY SPORTS ARENA

5:30AM – AUCKLAND V OTAGO – NPC – SKY SPORTS MIX

6:30AM – AUSTRALIA V SOUTH AFRICA – RUGBY CHAMPIONSHIP – SKY SPORTS MAIN EVENT/MIX

8:45AM – NEW ZEALAND V ARGENTINA – RUGBY CHAMPIONSHIP – SKY SPORTS ARENA

11AM – JAPAN V IRELAND – SECOND TEST – TG4

WORLD RUGBY MEN’S SEVENS ON WORLD.RUGBY

5:20PM – FIRST MATCH

6:48PM – IRELAND V FRANCE

10:09PM – IRELAND V WALES

2:05AM (SUNDAY) – FIJI V IRELAND

SUNDAY, AUGUST 28

WORLD RUGBY SEVENS ON WORLD.RUGBY

FIXTURES TO BE CONFIRMED

4:45PM – FIRST MATCH

RUGBY ON TV IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE IRISH RUGBY YOUTUBE CHANNEL

2021 Lions documentary to screen on Virgin Media from Wed Aug 24

The British & Irish Lions in conjunction with The South African Rugby Union has released a much-anticipated three-part behind-the-scenes documentary of the 2021 British & Irish Lions Series, which will be aired in Ireland on Virgin Media’s newest television station, Virgin Media Four.

The documentary series ‘Two Sides’ explores what transpired in the Springbok and Lions camps during the 2021 Tour of South Africa and has already received rave reviews since airing on ITV 1 earlier this summer.

This is the latest in a long and critically acclaimed series of Lions Tour documentaries that includes the mould-breaking ‘Living with Lions’ released 25 years ago.

‘Two Sides’ steps away from the traditional format, which has always concentrated on the tourists, and tells the stories of the Lions and Springboks during the first Tour to South Africa in over a decade.

The Tour was successfully completed against the hugely challenging backdrop of a global pandemic and the documentary features fly-on-the-wall footage of what was a gripping series.

As well as illuminating insights into the teams’ preparations and what went on during the matches, the documentary will also give fans a rare glimpse into the workings of a unique and memorable sporting event.

The British & Irish Lions and The South African Rugby Union are delighted to bring this three-part series to supporters with our broadcast partner in Ireland, Virgin Media.

The three hour-long episodes of Two Sides, produced by Whisper and T + W, will be shown on Virgin Media Four. Virgin Media Four is Virgin Media’s newest television channel and the documentary will form part of its launch.

Episode 1 will be shown on Wednesday 24 August at 9pm, Episode 2 on Wednesday 31 August at 9pm and Episode 3 on Wednesday 7 September at 9pm.

Episode 1 can be watched again on Virgin Media Four on Monday 29 August, Episode 2 on Monday 5 September and Episode 3 on Monday 12 September, all broadcast at 9pm.

Speaking on the new documentary, Ben Calveley, British & Irish Lions Managing Director, said: “We are delighted to give our fans in Ireland the opportunity to watch this brilliant documentary series. The British & Irish Lions and documentaries are inextricably linked.

“Going back to 1997 with the unforgettable ‘Living with Lions’, the Lions have produced a documentary capturing behind-the-scenes moments of every subsequent Tour.

“This particular documentary shows how both sides rose to the unprecedented challenge of hosting a major sporting event during a global pandemic and I’m sure Lions fans in Ireland will really enjoy it.”

South African Rugby Union CEO, Jurie Roux, added: “I know rugby fans are going to find this documentary fascinating and entertaining in equal measure, with the added twist this time of getting a fly-on-the-wall view of both camps involved in this unique tour.

“We are delighted to partner with The British & Irish Lions on ‘Two Sides’, which will act as a wonderful archive for rugby fans to look back upon for decades to come.”

(courtesy of www.lionsrugby.com)

New season, new gaff

From today, Sunday, August 21, 2008 

(our 14th birthday)

there will be a few changes here at Harpin Manor…

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article-focused content 

supported by social media & podcasts

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podcast- & video-focused content

supported by social media & articles

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http://www.harpinonrugby.net

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www.harpinonrugby.com

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All our content from 2008/09 to 2021/22 seasons will remain at the .net address for the time being.
We’re recording our first podcast of the new season on Sunday evening.  


Many thanks to all who have followed us over there, we look forward to harpin’ on Leinster & Ireland rugby some more at the new home.  JLP

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Ireland rugby 2021/22 – the writeup of all writeups

As happy as we were as Irish rugby fans in the wake of that wonderful win in Wellington, the few weeks since then have brought many of us back down to earth.

First there was the vote by the RFU on their policy regarding the participation of transgender players in the women’s game, although it wasn’t just the result that was alarming but also the protracted debate around the issue which preceded it – I briefly harped on this over the weekend.

Then there was the announcement by SANZAAR (a name which looks more and more like the home planet of an evil species in a sci fi movie every time I type it) that they are going to continue the trial of the “20-minute red card”, which seems to prioritize the spectacle for those watching over the safety of those playing.  Also in a really ironic twist I notice a lot of the people defending this move are the same ones arguing for the transgender ban under the guise of “player safety”.

But then on Sunday the entire rugby family read the tragic story of Siobhan Cattigan, and if all claims made by the article are true, then to my (admittedly untrained legally) mind, neither an apology nor an internal investigation by the SRU are anywhere near sufficient; instead it seems to be a case heading towards criminal negligence.

So I couldn’t introduce this post without at least acknowledging those issues – but for now we must of course hurry back to the main theme, namely Ireland’s 21/22 test campaign, which was quite the journey in every sense of the word.

It was meant to start in Las Vegas with a one off test against the USA, but sadly this fell foul to COVID, something Andy Farrell had gotten very used to since he was just two matches into his tenure.  From March 2020 on it was a case of matches postponed, rearranged, or at best played in mostly empty stadia as he tried to establish himself as a test level coach.

And it’s not like Irish fans were collectively giving him their full throated support and understanding at the beginning of November 2022.  When the team was named to face Japan, there was the usual chorus of disapproval for all the usual reasons…not enough development, not enough from certain provinces, too many from one particular province, yaddya yaddya.

There was really only one thing Farrell’s team could do to stick it to the naysayers and that was start winning.  And I think we all know what happened next so without any further ado, here’s a timeline of our progress through the Autumn internationals, Six Nations and of course the New Zealand tour, complete with quotes and links from our Harpin match writeups….

AUTUMN INTERNATIONALS

IRELAND-60 JAPAN-5

Sat Nov 6 – Aviva Stadium

Simply put, bringing offloads and “KBA” rugby back to the Irish table is in many ways like taking the shackles off.  Over the years it has been our way to truck it up the middle hoping for a penalty to create scoring chances and I don’t even think that’s necessarily a bad thing when you can make it work, although when opposition can see it coming as your “brand” from a long way out, the time does come to mix things up and it looks like we’re doing it.” – PUT TO THE SWORD

IRELAND-29 NEW ZEALAND-20

Sat Nov 13 – Aviva Stadium

So Lowe has gotten Reiko down and rolled away, and the All Black has one, two, THREE team mates gathering around him to protect the recycle for TJ Perenara, but three is clearly not enough for the War God who has already planted his feet in the ground and burrowed his way over the ball to give referee Luke Pearce no option but to go for his whistle.” – FEARLESS

IRELAND-53 ARGENTINA-7

Sun Nov 21 – Aviva Stadium

“…with all the debate over who should be backing up Sexton, plus another lurking in the background over what kind of full back we should have in reserve should Keenan ever be unavailable, all of a sudden we were being treated to half an hour of Joey in a role he played on several occasions for Leinster ‘back in the day’.  And he didn’t look too shabby back there either.” – PLENTY IN RESERVE

SIX NATIONS

IRELAND-29 WALES-7

Sat Feb 5 – Aviva Stadium

“…the (Josh Adams) ruling could not have been more pivotal for Ireland’s hopes of getting to four tries.  All of a sudden from a Welsh penalty heading towards our line, now we’re going the other way and with an extra man and straight from the lineout, a series of phases including what is by now a trademark JVDF crash ball set us up for JGP to do what he does best finding that final pass which Conway gratefully received to finish his second try.” – EARLY 6MAS PRESENT

FRANCE-30 IRELAND-24

Sat Feb 12 – Stade de France

Do I believe we’d have made up the 7 points we were short of victory if Sexton were on the pitch?  Yes, I do, absolutely.  Does that mean I believe Joey Carbery was a disaster and we can’t possibly win anything without our captain?  No, absolutely not.  Make of that what you will.” – STILL IN THE HUNT

IRELAND-57 ITALY-6

Sun Feb 27 – Aviva Stadium

…it was a case of JGP showing why he has become the presumptive starter in this “Farrellball” squad, moving so quickly he’s pretty much moving to the next breakdown before he’s finished passing from the last one, and with strong support from his forwards, we worked our way to the 22 where an inside pass by Peter O’Mahony was perfectly times (and disguised) to allow Caelan Doris through a gap. Next was the relatively easy bit as he has Sheehan and Carbery in support and it went quickly through the hands allowing our out half to defy a last gasp tackle to get it over the line. ” – A QUARE ONE

ENGLAND-15 IRELAND-32

Sat Mar 12 – Twickenham

Ewels’ body position going into the tackle was both awful and dangerous.  It ended James Ryan’s match before it had a chance to begin, and every contact to the head comes with the possibility of long-term implications.  It deserved a red card.  And when your team gets one, you deserve to be without a player no matter how long is left…The sanctions are not there to victimize.  They are there to influence behaviour.  Get. Those. Tackles. Lower.” – THE FULL EIGHTY

IRELAND-26 SCOTLAND-5

Sat Mar 19 – Aviva Stadium

“…this was the year of a French squad which itself will go down in history as one that achieved the Grand Slam courtesy of some of the greatest players this competition has ever seen.  Yet while the final table shows them to have won by a margin of four match points, we have to remember that they got an extra three for winning said Slam. When it comes to points earned in individual matches, Ireland only fell short by just the one point.  ONE…So if this team can reach those heights, who are we to bet against them learning enough to move on and go even higher. ” – ANOTHER STEP TO 2023

NEW ZEALAND TOUR

NEW ZEALAND-42 IRELAND-19

Sat Jul 2 – Eden Park, Auckland – First Test

“…it all started when Ringrose bobbled the pass.  Not his fault; it happens.  But for this play everything needed to be perfect and James Lowe knew this, which was why he tried so hard to adjust his run to be available.  Garry managed to hold onto it, managed to offload, but Lowe’s adjustments weren’t enough for him to be there, not his fault either of course.   So the ball went to ground, and as we all know, when this happens it’s up to the Rugby Gods to determine what happens next, for reasons only they know.” – MARGINAL

NEW ZEALAND-12 IRELAND-23

Sat Jul 9 – Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin – Second Test

Even putting aside the perennial talk outside of New Zealand that they tend to push the boundaries of the Laws – after a start like this, is it any wonder they might have tried to push them even further?  Like maybe a late hit on Mack Hansen?  Or maybe  tackle Garry Ringrose off the ball when he looks certain to score?  Or maybe stay upright when facing that same centre because you’re wary of him offloading or stepping around you?” – THE CARDS OF DUNEDIN

NEW ZEALAND-22 IRELAND-32

Sat Jul 16 – Sky Stadium, Wellington – Third Test

…while we can’t exactly say “it never looked in doubt”, because at one point despite the big halftime lead it most certainly did look in doubt, the way we managed to pull more and more big plays out of the bag, both with and without the ball, demonstrated clearly that this is a squad that has its sights set on a lot more success than this one end of season series, however historic the victory may be.” – TEAM OF AWESOME

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As you can see it was quite the season.  Just the two defeats, one to the Grand Slam champions and one to a team we beat three other times over the course of the campaign.  Oh, and now we’re number one in the World Rankings, which of course means they matter too 😜.

Now obviously what you see above is a list of matches from just the men’s senior team.  Here at Harpin Manor they and the Leinster senior men are the only teams we have the time to give full week-in, week-out coverage throughout the season, but we also do what we can to support rugby at all levels across Irish rugby, the four provinces and club level as best as we can.

So here is also a brief summary of how we saw some of the other Irish squads over the past 12 months.  It wasn’t all good by a long shot, but still I think it’s safe to say all the different programmes are definitely headed in the right direction.

WOMEN’S RUGBY

Towards the end of Leinster men’s season opener against the Bulls, we were winning comfortably so I could turn my attention to the Irish women in their World Cup qualifier against Scotland, and as we all know, it did not go well for them.

Unfortunately it wasn’t just this one result that represented a low point for the women’s game here at the time, there were issues all the way down through the system.  We spoke to @IrishWomens on our podcast about what needed to be done and it seemed clear that massive change was required all the way up to the very top, where the job of running the Women’s game was shared with that governing sevens rugby for both genders.

As often has been the case when there are issues within the game here, a report was commissioned with much debate about transparency surrounding it.  But eventually there was a commitment to appoint a dedicated head of Women’s rugby for the IRFU and also to produce full time contracts for a number of players in the 15s code.

Naturally all of this change meant that performances on the pitch were likely to stagnate for a time, although November test victories over the USA and Japan offered a decent start when it came to putting the WRWC disappointments behind us.

Then came the Six Nations, now in its own slot on the calendar, and while it began with a disappointing defeat at home to Wales plus even bigger losses away to France and England, there was a win over a decent Italian side plus some measure of revenge against the Scots to round off the season.

When it comes to personnel, we now have Nichola Fryday leading the side and forming an excellent engine room with Sam Monaghan, plus Linda Djougang doing an excellent job of taking over the number 1 jersey from the legendary Lindsay Peat.  That’s to name just three players, and there are many more but one of the issues the side has had is a difficulty in preventing players from moving back and forth between 15s and 7s.

Hopefully the new head of Women’s rugby will bring more consistency to the selection, and with that appointment, plus the contracts and the ambitious tour to Japan towards the end of August, there seems to be a lot to look forward to and hopefully the support from the general fan base will reflect this.

IRELAND MEN V MAORI AB’S

Apparently the IRFU kind of fell between two stools in organising the New Zealand tour…at first there was just to be the three tests while many were crying out for squad development, yet when the two matches against the Maoris were added to the schedule, it turned out we hadn’t brought enough players!

It probably didn’t help that so many were injured in the opening match which, like the first test, ended in victory for the home side, but in the end the midweek team bounced back every bit as much as the seniors and comfortably won the rematch in Wellington, with several players getting good game time in green, most notably perhaps from a Leinster perspective Ciarán Frawley at 10, even if that may not have been the intention when the squad was originally named.

UNDER 20’S MEN

Grand Slam.  Need I say more?  Well I guess I probably should…

Led by Reuben Crothers and with stellar performances from the likes of James Culhane, we posted significant margins of victory over Wales, Italy, England and Scotland but it was the 79th minute try by Ben Brownlee brilliantly converted by Charlie Tector pinching us a 1-point win over France in Aix-en-Provence that was the stand out result of the campaign.

With the Junior World Championships still off the table there was a Summer Series organised in June over in Italy, and although we sent a squad leaning more towards next season’s crop of prospects and shipped a couple of defeats to France and South Africa, they also found some mettle to beat England by a point before winning their final match against the Scots.

Plenty of talent coming up the pipeline for all the provinces to look forward to breaking through at senior level very soon.

SEVENS WOMEN & MEN

Sevens weekends should become a staple diet for us rugby-mad fans.  When Irish teams are involved, there are often up to a dozen different matches over the course of a couple of days, each of which only last about twenty minutes and most of which are available to watch for free on YouTube.

Naturally the ideal scenario would be for there to eventually be a World Series leg held in Ireland annually, but until that happens I hope we can collectively do more to be present to keep up with all the action for both women and men, as there has been much success over the past few years, culminating in qualification for the top tier in both genders as well as the World Cup to be held in South Africa this September.

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Right, that’s enough harpin’ on last season.  The URC fixtures were released last week so it’s time to start looking ahead to 22/23 and as I have said several times on these pages recently, we’ll be making some changes to our routine and we’ll be working on that over the next few weeks and hopefully be able to start sharing it with you towards the end of the month.

In the meantime I’ll be keeping up with the latest news on the Twitter machine so by all means join the discussion, that’s what it’s for.  JLP

PS : last week we did a similar post covering Leinster men’s 2021/22 season, click here

Leinster Rugby 21/22 – the writeup of all writeups

It’s the end of July, we’ve seen the snazzy new jersey for next season plus news is starting to trickle through about fixtures…so before we’re really counting the days to when it all starts up again, time for one post to look back through the timeline of Leinster’s 21/22 campaign.

On the “End of Season” episode of our podcast we talked about it in a general sense so be sure to have a listen – the whole point of this post is to remind you of the progress from September all the way through to June.  

Naturally there were disappointments towards the end, but I have a funny feeling that if you were the type of fan that only cared about the province when we were winning silverware, you wouldn’t be following a fansite like this one!

Personally, I really do think the matches that stand out most for me are those in South Africa.  Obvs I wouldn’t be saying that had we won a final or two, but still the fact that we were able to not only send an inexperienced side down there but also for them to do so well and come back with something from both matches, bodes really well for the many challenges that lie ahead.

Anyway – here’s a list of all the matches we played, also the ones we didn’t, plus of course the one we didn’t which was given a final score anyway…

SEPTEMBER

Leinster-40 Harlequins-21

Fri Sep 10 – Aviva Stadium – Preseason friendly

By far and away our catalyst was none other than Johnny Sexton…He was on top of his game, showed the very leadership we’d expect from our club captain, and clearly inspired those around him to rack up four quality tries before halftime against a Harlequins XV not a million miles from that which won the Premiership a few months ago.” – WELCOME BACK

Leinster-31 Vodacom Bulls-3

Sat Sep 25 – Aviva Stadium – URC Round 1

By far the most eye-catching change was in the front row, with both Porter starting and Healy on the bench sporting new jersey numbers. And you simply could not have written a better script to open the match.  Bulls 10 Johan Goosen kicks off and puts it straight into touch, giving us the first Leinster scrum before the clock has barely gotten going.  After one reset, Adamson’s arm goes straight up in the air for a penalty to Leinster on Porter’s side – just how satisfying must that have been?” – THE MORE THINGS CHANGE…

OCTOBER

Dragons-6 Leinster-7

Sun Oct 3 – Rodney Parade – URC Round 2

The bottom line that made us able to come away with four match points on the day was that not once during the 80 minutes did the Dragons look even remotely like they were ever going to cross our line.” – THE KNOCK ON EFFECT

Leinster-43 Zebre-7

Sat Oct 9 – RDS Arena – URC Round 3

Sexton scooped the PotM gong courtesy of another legendary Ireland skipper Fiona Coughlan in the RTÉ commentary booth.  I might have leaned towards Adam Byrne to help celebrate his return but in reality it is hard to argue that Johnny’s introduction made a significant difference to the proceedings.” – 10K’S A CROWD

Leinster-50 Scarlets-15

Sat Oct 16 – RDS Arena – URC Round 4

Ciarán Frawley won Player of the Match and while I probably would have given it to a forward, his role in our attacking structure was definitely worthy of recognition because although a lot of the moves and formations on show didn’t quite pay off as designed, at times we actually looked capable of creating space at will.” – FORWARD MOMENTUM

Glasgow Warriors-15 Leinster-31

Fri Oct 22 – Scotstoun – URC Round 5

“…all in all a very satisfying end to the opening five rounds by Leinster.  Top of the URC pile, just the one point dropped, defenses in order, new evolution of attack starting to come good, and still with things like a creaky lineout keeping us honest.” – TOP OF THE PILE

NOVEMBER

Leinster-10 Ulster-20

Sat Nov 27 – RDS Arena – URC Round 6

“…while (Max Deegan) seemed to expect the ball to come to him, James Hume was lying in wait to pounce, totally earning the right to recover a little bobble and run it in to not only nail down the historic win but also deny us a losing bonus we might have actually been thankful for all things considered.” – LYING IN WAIT

DECEMBER

Leinster-47 Connacht-19

Fri Dec 3 – RDS Arena – URC Round 7

A mere mortal would have known Jordan Larmour was with him and simply fixed his first tackler and put his winger through.  But not this guy (Dan Sheehan).  Instead he does a little shuffle step putting Mack Hansen on the deck (remember, big hooker vs pacy winger…not crashing through him, rather actually skipping around him) before powering to the line for a wonderful YouTube clip-worthy try just before half time.” – MORE LIKE IT

Leinster-45 Bath-20

Sat Dec 11 – Aviva Stadium – HCC Round 1

“…I’m going to do my best train myself to stop and take a deep breath whenever I’m getting too annoyed when my beloved Leinster doesn’t achieve perfection in absolutely everything they do, instead remembering the chants of those faithful younglings from Saturday.  We could probably all do with watching sport that way more often.” – “LEINSTER!!! LEINSTER!!!”

Montpellier-28 Leinster-0*

Fri Dec 17 – GGL Stadium – HCC Round 2 (match forfeited)

The pandemic goalposts keep getting moved on a near-daily basis so it’s not just sporting types which have to handle it.  So what happens, happens and of course we all hope above everything else that all who tested positive are actually ok.” – ASTERISKS AND THE OMICRON

Munster v Leinster (postponed)

Sun Dec 26 – Thomond Park – URC Round 8

JANUARY

Ulster v Leinster (postponed)

Sat Jan 1 – Kingspan Stadium – URC Round 9

Leinster v Lions (postponed)

Fri Jan 7 – RDS Arena – URC Round 10

Leinster-89 Montpellier-7

Sun Jan 16 – RDS Arena – HCC Round 3

“…for this try JVDF was “only” involved at the start of the move, making the most of Jack Conan’s catch at a lineout at halfway, and at the end when finishing it by dotting down, again taking it from his number 8.  What happened in between was a wonderful series of passes, offloads, clearouts and recycles from pretty much the rest of the XV, with the highlight being a guided missile of a long pass from James Lowe into the path of Jimmy O’Brien.  Plus we originally won back possession after a strong bout of defending at halfway.” – NO MERCI

Bath-7 Leinster-64

Sat Jan 22 – The Rec – HCC Round 4

Over the past couple of weeks the measure of (Jimmy O’Brien’s) displays can be found in how easily the more experienced backs around him include him in virtually every move.  Whether you’ve played European rugby before or not, if you’re selected for this Leinster team you’re guaranteed to be involved in everything and he was able to back up the confidence with a bucket load of scores and quality contributions.” – GRAND JOB

Cardiff Rugby-29 Leinster-27

Sat Jan 29 – Cardiff Arms Park – URC Round 11

When the two defences came out of the blocks looking stingy, the home side tried something different and it kept paying off, while we stuck to our guns and although it did get us three tries, I really think if we had taken a similar approach to our hosts we could have gotten more and even killed the game altogether up to half an hour” – EVANS ABOVE

FEBRUARY

Leinster-26 Edinburgh-7

Fri Feb 11 – RDS Arena – URC Round 12

Not much to summarize…only that while we definitely deserved to win because our try line defense was far superior to theirs, we really should treasure that bonus point because whatever the rugby gods had against us in Cardiff, they most certainly looked keen to make amends here.” – BIT OF A STRETCH

Leinster-29 Ospreys-7

Sat Feb 19 – RDS Arena – URC Round 13

Personally I wish it could be possible to nominate an entire bench for a match gong.  Our starting XV did well here it’s true, seizing control early and staying strong defensively but were it not for the collection of cameos the all important bonus point was by no means certain.” – BENCH BONUS

Leinster-21 Lions-13

Fri Feb 25 – RDS Arena – URC Round 10

It was a certain try.  It just was.  And even if Pienaar was caught, that wasn’t going to be enough – he had to be hit just right so he couldn’t power through and touch the ball down anyway as the best wingers are wont to do.  And boy did he hit the guy just right, it was one the best try-saving tackles the RDS has seen.” – THAT TACKLE

MARCH

Benetton-17 Leinster-61

Sat Mar 5 – Stadio di Monigo – URC Round 14

I wouldn’t feel too badly about things if I were Benetton, we were in determined mood on this particular day and they are getting used to a new coach and definitely have the talent to get back, especially when their internationals return.  Plus, had the URC schedule gone as originally planned, they would have been stronger for this match, not having had to face the Sharks a week before.” – CLOUD NINE

Ulster-18 Leinster-13

Sat Mar 12 – Kingspan Stadium – URC Round 9

For Leinster the last two weeks have shown us exactly how much a functioning lineout means to us.  Without clean ball last time out, no way would we have racked up 60+ points.  This time, the inaccuracy arguably cost us the 5 points we were short at the end, although we still had the Ulster D to contend with.” – DOUBLE TROUBLE

Connacht-8 Leinster-45

Sat Mar 26 – Sportsground – URC Round 15

When it comes to intent on this challenge, obviously nobody is suggesting (Daly) wanted to injure (Frawley), but he was attempting a tackle so this was always going to struggle to find mitigation down from a red card.” – HAWKS OVER EAGLES

APRIL

Munster-19 Leinster-34

Sat Apr 2 – Thomond Park – URC Round 8

Naturally I was hoping for a big shove from our pack, but…I did not expect one…like I always say when I have reservations over my team, I’m delighted to be proven wrong and what followed was a really good 8-man shove from Leinster which had our hosts under pressure, so much so that when Kendellen reached down and grabbed the ball, he was met by Caelan Doris.” – SWITCHED ON

Connacht-21 Leinster-26

Fri Apr 8 – Sportsground – HCC Rd of 16 (1st leg)

When it comes to these two-leg rounds, well I’m not as against them as many seem to be, and for sure there a lot of ties still well poised going into the reverse fixtures, but overall I’d be very happy to see a return to the “four team pools leading to quarterfinals” format as soon as possible.” – ALL TO PLAY FOR

Leinster-56 Connacht-20

Fri Apr 15 – Aviva Stadium – HCC Rd of 16 (2nd leg)

With the margin on the day already at 29 and the aggregate at 34…all (Lowe) had to do was place it down where he stood to bring his personal tally to four and it was a perfect end to the match, right? Wrong…Ever grateful to his out half for setting him up, James made sure the placekick was that much easier by skipping around towards the posts…” – THE LOWE SHOW

Sharks-28 Leinster-23

Sat Apr 23 – Jonsson Kings Park Stadium – URC Round 16

Frawley’s poise was really impressive, so much so that I’m wondering if he’s not better suited to a 10 role.  I know that doesn’t speak well for Harry, who was good on occasion here, but with his 12 taking the placekicks I reckon it’s a fair observation.” – POINT TAKEN

Stormers-20 Leinster-13

Sat Apr 30 – DHL Stadium – URC Round 17

Sure, we fell short in the end, and sure, there were frustrating moments like those blocking penalties at lineouts, but overall it was a second consecutive 80-minute display that can only be met with immense pride from all fans.” – STORMCHASING

MAY

Leicester Tigers-14 Leinster-23

Sat May 7 – Welford Road Stadium – HCC Quarterfinal

Naturally we needed a bit of luck along the way, every winning team does, but on a day when fans are bound to be nervous whether their team are favourites or not the boys in blue made their return to Leo Cullen’s stomping ground look perhaps not “easy” or “comfortable”, but definitely controlled.” – GAME MANAGEMENT

Leinster-40 Toulouse-17

Sat May 14 – Aviva Stadium – HCC Semifinal

“…the fact that James Lowe did…two amazing kicks, also helping himself to two tries while playing a pivotal role in our fourth, DIDN’T get Player of the Match, which nobody, not even he would dispute, tells you all you need to know.” – LEINSTERTAINMENT+

Leinster-35 Munster-25

Sat May 21 – Aviva Stadium – URC Round 18

“..it was kicked ahead into our 22 it was gathered by Jordan Larmour….I reckon it was the sixth Munsterman that had a go at defying his steps and weaves who actually brought him down, but not until he was at the halfway line..” – FIRST OF ALL

Leinster-21 La Rochelle-24

Sat May 28 – Marseille – HCC Final

I truly believe it was simple.  Two great teams went at it for 80 minutes, the lead exchanged hands a few times, and when a push came to a shove towards the end, the better team won.  Just.” – OUTSTRETCHED

JUNE

Leinster-76 Glasgow Warriors-14

Sat Jun 4 – RDS Arena – URC Quarterfinal

“…this was a good performance and a powerful result, on a bright (if really, really cold for some reason) day back at the RDS where we hadn’t been since February.  And while it may not have told us much about our chances of winning this new competition, it was definitely an excellent way to put last weekend behind us…- D4GGER

Leinster-26 Bulls-27

Sat Jun 11 – RDS Arena – URC Semifinal

no matter what has gone before, you still have to go out and get the job done and besides, the more success you’ve had throughout the season, the more likely opponents are going to find a specific way to beat you.” – BUSINESS END

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Next week we’ll do a similar post for Ireland’s matches, but outside that we’re kind of in “coccoon mode” here at Harpin’ Manor as we hope to change a few things around in time for next season.

Of course we’re always keeping tabs on the day to days happenings in the rugby world, so feel free to follow the conversation on the twitter machine and jump in with your two cents when the mood takes you.  JLP